« October 2008 | Main | December 2008 »

November 29, 2008

Fragilities Exposed: Downturn, World Economy and Re-Balancing

As we're all coming to realize and grasp this evolving downturn is going to be longer and more severe than has been anticipated (t's Back: Welcome to the Downturn for Real, Storm Flags Flying: State of the Evolving Downturn). And it's coupled with the most severe breakdown and evolving re-structuring of credit markets and the Finance Industry since the 1930s. After all when you have a strongly conservative Republican administration calling for a major regulatory overhaul with the charge being led by an ex-CEO of Goldman Sachs the world is indeed changing. Another meme that has long bitten the dust is the "de-coupling" notion where the US economy wasn't the engine. Instead we're rapidly moving beyond "re-coupling" back to the future where Europe and Japan are accelerating into their own more severe downturns themselves; which are moving faster than the schadenfreudish were thinking as little as a few weeks ago. The final notion that's biting the dust, big time, is that the emerging markets aren't going to get hurt.

The Re-Balancing of the World 

In fact they're already hurting, the pain is likely to get worse and as it does structural fragilities and weaknesses are being exposed, tested and run a risk of failure.(Commandos mop up last of Mumbai militants ) But there's something likely to emerge out of this even more profound. As investors and stakeholders you should care about the metastasizing worldwide downturn in any case. But four factors will take this out of the realm of the "ordinary" and change the structural patterns we've gotten used to in the last several years, essentially since China's accession to the WTO. First declining import demand, especially for oil and consumer goods, will severely damage the economies of the emerging countries. Second, albeit on an individual basis, each of the major BRICs has internal economic problems that are being exacerbated. Third these strains will threaten the socionomic stability of several of the BRICs, particularly (in order) Russia, China and India. Brazil seems to be as exposed but has pursued a more balanced development strategy but will nonetheless be strained. And fourth - there will emerge a major re-balancing of the nature of the world economy which will impact us all for a long time. Our chosen proxy for beginning to grasp these changes is the market indices for the major bricks. The accompanying chart shows the US, Brazil (Bovespa), China (Shanghai) and Russia for the last five years. Notice that they all are now, largely, popped bubbles but there are vast differences. Brazil has held onto some serious gains while China really hasn't and Russia is back where it was three years ago with worse to come.

Differential Impacts

After the break the readings provide a decent survey of the worldwide economic news from the last couple of weeks - not necessarily the most current but the most recent is simply worse and worsening. In the developed world (the G8-1, now that Russia is a pariah) Europe and Japan are entering severe downturns rapidly, the world's major central banks have abruptly shifted policy and started trying to pump up their respective economies and both are trying to pull together significant stimulus packages. In Europe that last is proving difficult because of coordination problems.

Russia despite its' posturings was entirely dependent on oil and commodity revenues which are dropping rapidly and dramatically. The same impacts will occur for the major oil-exporting countries which means that the ME and Gulf countries are rapidly shifting into low gear or possibly worse. The accompany chart of long-term oil prices from a month ago highlights the l.t. trend and our guesstimated target prices. The great irony here is that we had an enormous runup in prices because supply exceeded demand, real prices were low and, as a result, the industries seriously under-invested in capital expansion and capacity growth in the '90s. When globalization took off we abruptly shifted into demand being greater than supply and a whole raft of new projects were scheduled to come on line to grow capacity. At $85/barrel most of the non-traditional alternatives are uneconomic - which means that they're suffering. At $55/barrel much of the expanded production from existing fields and the development of new ones is halted. The end result is that in 2-3 years we will return to shortfall conditions and start the whole vicious cycle all over again.

The situation in China is vastly different. First off they built an export-led economy and as developed country consumers and other developing countries cut back they are being hurt. Beyond that growth led to rapidly growing costs in the major exporting regions and low to non-existent profits. As a result many previously profitable exporters are going out of business and laying off vast numbers of workers. While Chinese growth may drop to "only" 7-8% in the next couple of years you need to recall that they must have growth of 6-7% to stay even with labor force growth and shifts of the rural framing population into more modern jobs. Without that safety the stability of the country comes under increasing strain. At a third level the recent product quality problems combined with rising costs is changing the economics of Chinese exporters drastically and causing foreign investors to shift new investments to other regions and countries. The bloom is really off the rose. India, as the recent terrorist attacks show, is experiencing similar problems. Brazil has a more balanced economy as well as being relative energy independent and not dependent on commodity exports as much; though it's exports of agricultural products and iron ore are dropping and the agricultural sector can't finance itself because of the credit crisis. All in all not a pretty picture.

The final "big picture" shift will be that the US and other developed countries will be shifting from over-consumption to an increased emphasis on saving. Which means that long-term structural demand for exporters from the BRICs will, at best, not grow at the same rates. That will have profound impacts not only on these domestic economies but on worldwide capital flows. Please read Will Dollar Lose Global Reserve Currency Status? for a fuller discussion of this critical long-term shift and, more importantly, really think about it. The world as we grew to know will NOT be the same after we get thru this current collections of crisis. And, as Brad Setser says, if you read nothing else read the World Bank's most recent quarterly report on China for a fuller appreciation (If you only read one thing on China this fall …).

Global Outlook and Adjustments 

Global Push to Beat Economic Downturn European central banks cut their key interest rates sharply, and Democrats readied a plan to inject $60 billion to $100 billion into the sagging U.S. economy. European central banks cut their key interest rates sharply, and Democrats readied a plan to inject $60 billion to $100 billion into the sagging U.S. economy, as leading industrialized nations tried anew to stave off a global downturn now predicted to be the worst since the end of World War II. The Bank of England surprised markets by lowering its key lending rate by one and a half percentage points, to a 54-year low of 3% from 4.5%, in its biggest cut since 1992. The European Central Bank cut its key rate for countries that share the euro currency by a half percentage point, to a two-year low of 3.25%, while Switzerland's central bank also cut its main target rate by a half-point in an unusual between-meetings move. In Seoul early Friday, the Bank of Korea lowered its main interest rate for the third time in a month. The International Monetary Fund urged nations to go further by turning to fiscal measures, such as boosting spending and cutting taxes, to prevent a world-wide tailspin in economic growth. The IMF put out a new global forecast Thursday predicting that the economies of the world's "advanced economies" -- 31 nations including the U.S., Western Europe and Japan -- would contract by a combined 0.3% in 2009. That would be the first year those economies shrank as a group since the IMF was founded in 1945. Thus far, aggressive loosening of monetary policy around the globe has done little to ease market concerns or buoy growth. Partly that may be a matter of timing. Interest-rate reductions can take between six to 18 months before they have a measurable effect on economic activity, economists estimate. But monetary policy also may be insufficient to tackle today's global credit crunch, in which financial institutions are wary of lending. The aversion of borrowers and lenders to taking risks can swamp the stimulative effect of interest-rate cuts, which are meant to reduce borrowing costs for banks and businesses.
IMF Slashes World Growth Forecasts Again

Will Dollar Lose Global Reserve Currency Status? A key factor driving financial crises is extreme trade imbalances between nations; debt gets accumulated partly as a result of financing a trade deficit. For smaller countries, a vicious spiral can ensue which ends in recourse to the IMF. In 1944, the US was the world's biggest creditor, and imposed a system that placed the whole burden of maintaining the balance of trade on deficit nations; there would be no limits on the trade surplus that exporters could accumulate. The entire post-war economic infrastructure, including the World Bank and the IMF dates from this conference, and is now crumbling in the face of a sudden reversal of historic trade and savings imbalances. The US would long ago have had to make dramatic economic adjustments had it not been for the dollar's special status as the world's reserve currency, in which commodities are priced and in which foreign countries have to hold currency balances at the IMF. China, which for all the media hype barely makes it into the top 100 countries by GDP per capita, has been hugely subsidizing US borrowing and consumption. The trade surplus countries have had to buy over $5 trillion dollars in US bonds in recent years to stop their currencies (China, the Gulf States and 40 other countries have dollar linked currencies) rising. This had the effect of inflating the recent US credit bubble by artificially forcing down bond yields; this whole mess has at its root an excess of savings and mercantilist growth policies in Asia. China is now in economic meltdown, as a growth model based on chronically unproductive over-investment and marginally profitable manufactured exports begins to unravel, as I warned it would back in March and repeatedly since. The World Bank's latest China Quarterly makes sobering reading, and can be downloaded here. The near collapse of the global banking system this year is the culmination of a series of dangerous imbalances that have build up over many years, notably consumer leverage levels reaching 350% of GDP in the US. Goldman estimates that the US private sector’s financial balances (private borrowing net of private investment) will reverse from a deficit of 4% of GDP in 2005 to a surplus of around 10% of GDP at the end of 2009 ie the US private sector will go from being a net borrower to a big net saver. At the same time the current account deficit will swing from a 5-6% deficit to balance or even small surplus. I've long argued that US consumer demand will tumble by 6-7% points of GDP and revert to long term averages after the boom of recent years; the best policy can achieve is to make the process orderly. The implications for trade surplus countries in Asia are grim. The global liquidity engine, whereby China and the oil-exporters provide (subsidized) financing to the US to sustain its trade deficit and their exports, will come shuddering to a halt in coming months.

Developed Economies: Europe, Japan

Europe Tips Into Recession  Most of Europe officially fell into recession in the latest quarter as U.S. consumers and companies showed fresh signs of distress, according to data released Friday -- increasing the pressure on global leaders holding an emergency summit on the financial crisis this weekend in Washington. The recession is the first for the euro zone -- the 15 countries that now use the euro currency -- since the shared currency was launched in late 1999. The combined economy of the countries, which rivals that of the U.S. in size, shrank 0.2% in the third quarter for its second straight quarter of decline. The euro-zone announcement came a day after Europe's biggest national economy and the world's fourth-largest, Germany, announced its own recession. Japan, the No. 2 economy, will disclose early Monday morning in Tokyo whether it has technically slid into recession or narrowly averted it. The Asian financial center of Hong Kong also announced Friday that it was in recession. Major global economic institutions in recent days have forecast a recession spreading across the world's developed countries in the coming months. The shared gloom will not necessarily translate into agreement this weekend among leaders of the so-called Group of 20 nations, where China, India, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa and other rising forces are meeting with traditional economic powerhouses including the U.S., Japan, Germany and the U.K. Most economists doubt the summit will yield any new rescue plans. Most of Europe's major countries are sliding for a number of different reasons. But much of the slump is traceable to the financial crisis that originated in the U.S., and which directly affected some European financial institutions that bought securities backed by shaky American home loans. World Economic Graphic

Japan's Economy Slides Into First Recession Since 2001; GDP Shrinks 0.4% Japan's economy, the world's second largest, entered its first recession since 2001 last quarter and the government and economists say conditions may get even worse. Gross domestic product shrank an annualized 0.4 percent in the three months ended Sept. 30, the Cabinet Office said today in Tokyo. Economists predicted the economy would grow 0.1 percent after contracting a revised 3.7 percent in the previous period. The slowdown may deepen as the global financial crisis hurts exports, prompting companies from Toyota Motor Corp. to Canon Inc. to slash profit forecasts and cut investments. Japan has the lowest interest rates among the 20 biggest economies and public debt that exceeds 180 percent of GDP, limiting the government's ability to stimulate growth. Growth in China, which became Japan's biggest customer in July, slowed to 9 percent last quarter, the weakest since 2003. Quarter-on-quarter, Japan's economy shrank 0.1 percent, today's report showed. Capital spending fell 1.7 percent from the previous three months, compared with economists' expectations of a 2 percent drop. Net exports subtracted 0.2 percentage point from growth after imports outweighed an increase in shipments abroad. Exports rose 0.7 percent, less than the 1.2 percent expected. Imports climbed 1.9 percent as oil surged to a record in the quarter. Economists predicted a 1.5 percent gain. Still, Japan will probably suffer less than its biggest counterparts after companies shed debt and streamlined labor forces following the bursting of the property and asset bubble in the early 1990s. Asia's biggest economy will shrink 0.1 percent next year, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, less than the 0.9 percent and 0.5 percent contractions in the U.S. and Europe.

Emerging Economies

 

The Coming Crunch The global credit crunch has now hit emerging economies, including those in Asia, which many had hoped or expected to be able to "decouple" from developed economies. There will be no escape, and even worse, the super typhoon that is now battering emerging markets will in turn deepen the global recession. The global credit contraction will affect emerging markets in several ways. First, their exports and imports (of raw materials) will fall as excess demand is eliminated in the over-leveraged rich economies of Europe and North America. There will also be a reduction in capital flows to developing economies in all forms (credit, portfolio investment and foreign direct investment) as a result of deleveraging. At the same time, household and corporate wealth will be destroyed as a result of falling liquidity supply from both domestic and foreign sources. Those emerging economies with large foreign-currency bank loans and liabilities face debt deflation, while many corporations in Asia will find it difficult to grow because they are unable to roll over their excessive foreign loans and bonds. Many emerging-market current accounts will turn from surplus to deficit, private capital inflows will drop precipitously and residents will run down their assets and take their capital out. So these economies will have a huge external financing problem next year. Their foreign exchange reserves will fall sharply along with their currencies and financial assets. Most emerging markets don't have sufficiently robust domestic demand to offset the impact of falling exports as well as an overhang of surplus capacity in the export sector. Their domestic economies are just too small. In China, for example, the consumer accounts for only 36% of demand and investment for 42%, much of it export-related. In the U.S., the figure for the consumer is 70%.Emerging-market exports were not the only beneficiary of excess credit growth. Capital flows were just as important. Excess liquidity flooded into these economies in the form of portfolio and FDI inflows. This boosted currencies and bloated domestic money supply and credit. In turn, this drove up asset prices and so created more wealth and more demand. Unsurprisingly, the private sector in these countries spotted the opportunity to borrow cheap money in weak currencies and built up massive amounts of dollar and yen debts and foreign exchange derivative liabilities.

Fitch lowers credit outlook on emerging economies Fitch Ratings on Monday lowered the sovereign credit rating outlooks for six emerging market economies to reflect higher risks to creditworthiness stemming from the global financial crisis and economic slowdown. The outlooks on the long-term foreign currency ratings for South Korea, Mexico, Russia and South Africa, were revised down to "negative" from "stable," Fitch, one of the three major international credit ratings agencies, said in a release. A negative outlook means there is a greater chance of the actual credit rating being downgraded. Outlooks on Chile and Malaysia, meanwhile, were lowered to "stable" from "positive," the agency said. South Korea's A+ rating is four notches below Fitch's highest of AAA and six notches above "speculative" grade, generally regarded as "junk." Russia, Mexico and South Africa are all rated BBB+, three levels above "speculative." Chile is at A, and Malaysia is at A-. "The profound shift in the global economic and financial outlook pose significant real economy and policy challenges for emerging markets," David Riley, head of Fitch's Global Sovereign Ratings Group, said in a statement. Riley said that policymakers in emerging economies have less room for mistakes than their counterparts in advanced countries, though are in a better position to deal with the current challenges than at any time in the past. "Nonetheless, the risks of economic and financial stress that could undermine sovereign creditworthiness have risen and that is reflected in the prospective ratings actions taken today," he said.

Stopping the rot JUST another week’s news in eastern Europe: Latvia, after vehement denials, starts talks with the IMF; Bulgaria loses €220m ($286m) in promised payments from the European Union because of its failure to tackle corruption; and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development cuts its growth forecast for the region by half. But the good news is that worries of a huge meltdown, from the Baltic to the Black Sea, now look overblown. The most likely outcome is several years of low or no growth, with bigger hiccups in countries that have the shakiest financial systems and biggest imbalances. The outside world (ie, the IMF, the EU and the European Central Bank) is ready to help when necessary and—more usefully—even before problems hit markets. The ECB has opened a €10 billion credit line to Poland, which saw its currency, the zloty, fall sharply earlier this month. Hungary’s central bank was even able to cut its interest rates by half a point from the 11.5% rate that it set last month, as part of a $25 billion international bail-out. And foreign banks have stood by their subsidiaries in the ex-communist countries. It was their risky lending that inflated the property bubbles, now popped, and also financed huge current-account deficits in such places as Latvia and Bulgaria. The biggest worries are now focused on Bulgaria and Romania, the poorest and worst-governed new members of the EU. The Bulgarians have their hands tied by a currency board that pegs the lev rigidly to the euro. That rules out devaluation to restore competitiveness, which is a concern as exports sag. It also removes a potential buffer, because the central bank cannot adjust interest rates. A current-account deficit worth a quarter of GDP looks alarming. At least Bulgaria’s fiscal position is strong. The state has little foreign debt and runs a budget surplus. That should allow it to increase public spending as the economy slows.

Making a Jester Out of Medvedev We all learned from the Russian media how President Dmitry Medvedev arrived in Washington for the Group of 20 summit and offered his ideas on how to build a new global financial system. What the media did not report, however, is that Russia has been essentially evicted from the G8 as the West has reached a consensus that Russia has no place in the elite club of developed, wealthy and democratic nations. For the past eight years, the Russian economy was like a huge colander. With oil prices above $100 per barrel, petrodollars flooded into the colander with amazing force. As long as oil prices remained high, it seemed as if the colander could actually hold water. Unfortunately, the sharp drop in oil prices cut off the flow coming into the colander, and we discovered that it doesn't hold water after all. There were other major leaks as well. Dollars have fled Russia at the rate of $3 billion to $7 billion per week. It is useless to try to stop this outflow because the dollars are being sent abroad by the very people who were the most active in drilling the holes in the colander in the first place. There's nothing the government can do about the problem either. If it gives money to the banks, they'll just send it overseas. If it doesn't give them money, there will be a catastrophic liquidity crisis and the interbank interest rates will reach astronomical levels. To make matters worse, the government's reserves are streaming out of the colander, but the Kremlin is only worried about choosing which oligarchs should get a slice of the bailout pie. How can the Kremlin solve the problem of its leaking colander? Find a scapegoat. Who would be the best scapegoat? Russia's new, young president. The plan to frame Medvedev is clear from the haste with which he proposed changing the Constitution. What will follow over the next year is easy to predict. First, the ruble will collapse in early 2009 -- or at the latest when the country's gold and foreign currency reserves run out. When this happens, someone will have to explain to the people why all the money that had been amassed in the state colander over the past eight years vanished in only a few months.
$57 Bln Spent on Ruble in 2 Months, Investors Spooked By Halts In Trading
Moscow Times Running Log on the “Crisis”

China: Fragile Giant ?

Global economy depends on China The Beijing government knew how to fight its last big slowdown: Spend big on infrastructure. Its solution this time won't be so simple, and we all have a lot at stake. China is in a perfect position -- to fight the previous economic war. Unfortunately, this global economic slowdown is a lot different from the one China battled so successfully in 1997-98. In that crisis, big increases in spending on infrastructure ensured that China's economy rebounded quickly from the downturn caused by the Asian currency crisis. This time, though, infrastructure spending won't be enough. To prevent a slump in growth to 7% -- that's a slump when your economy has been growing by better than 11% a year -- in 2009 China will have to get the country's consumers to spend. That's a much tougher job, especially because the Beijing government has been almost uniformly unsuccessful in recent years in stimulating consumer spending. The duration and the depth of the current global slowdown -- which is deep enough to qualify as a recession in the United States, Europe and Japan -- and the long-term health of the global economy after this slowdown hinge on China's ability and willingness to fight this new war. When economists began predicting that growth would drop to 8% -- or lower -- in 2009, the government reversed course. China needs growth of 7% just to generate enough jobs to absorb increases in new workers from population growth and migration to the cities from the countryside. Economic growth of 7%, moreover, wouldn't do anything to reduce the country's supply of unemployed and underemployed workers. With the country already experiencing a rising level of domestic protest caused by the growing gap between incomes in the cities and the country, letting the economy slow further was just too risky. Why less spending on infrastructure in what is arguably a much more dangerous crisis? Two reasons, China experts say. First, the country has invested so much in infrastructure over the past decade -- and has already allocated plenty for infrastructure in its 2006-10 plan -- that it's hard to find new infrastructure projects that provide decent returns on the investment. China has watched carefully as Japan has repeatedly failed to jump-start its economy, despite massive spending on infrastructure, because so much of that spending went to politically motivated, make-work projects without benefit to the national economy. China doesn't want to go down that road.Second, the big gains, long term and short term, are on the consumer side of the economy. Beijing will get more bang for its stimulus yuan by investing in the consumer economy rather than by investing in more infrastructure. Even before this crisis, Beijing knew that the economy's problems were on the consumer side. China's consumers make up just 40% of that country's economic activity; in the U.S., consumers constitute about 65% of the economy. The consumer sector contributed just 20% of China's growth in 2007 compared with a 35% contribution from exports. That imbalance has left China overly dependent on exports. The slowdown in the economies of the country's biggest trading partners is projected to cut China's export growth to 10% in 2009 from 21% in 2008. That's frightening to the Beijing government because the global boom that just ended left many China industries with huge overcapacity. Many sectors face a massive shakeout of their most inefficient companies -- and a huge loss of jobs -- unless the Beijing government can find a way to increase demand.
Global financial crisis will hurt China much more than the US, If you only read one thing on China this fall …, China downturn deepens

China stimulus plan fuels hope for new investment Investors welcomed China's multibillion-dollar stimulus package but analysts said Monday the plan will depend on Chinese companies to supply a big share of the spending. Stock markets in Japan, Hong Kong and mainland China soared after Sunday's announcement of the 4 trillion yuan, or $586 billion, package as Beijing joined moves by governments around the world to cushion the blow of the global slowdown. The plan calls for higher government spending on roads, airports and other infrastructure, tax deductions for exporters and bigger subsidies to the poor and farmers. Spending on health and education will be increased, as well as on environmental protection and high technology. But it also depends on corporate investment and promises bank lending for rural projects, smaller companies and consumers. "I don't believe a fiscal stimulus alone is enough to keep growth going. I see it as the jump-starting of a car. Corporate investment and bank lending are the fuel that will be necessary to keep it going," said UBS Securities economist Tao Wang. Beijing might supply one-quarter of the announced spending, or 1 trillion yuan ($145 billion), with the rest coming from increased investment by Chinese state companies, bank lending or bond sales by local authorities for individual projects, said Ting Lu, a Merrill Lynch economist.
China's new reality: Economic boom is slowing

China Losing Luster with U.S. Manufacturers Two years of disastrous quality-control breakdowns, from foul fish and lead-tainted toys to poisoned drugs and dairy products, are taking their toll on China's allure as a manufacturing platform. A new study by supply-chain consulting firm AMR Research found that quality concerns are among the chief reasons U.S. manufacturers are scaling back plans to source more goods from China. Instead, U.S. companies are looking harder at Mexico and other locales closer to home when exploring where to put new capacity. The reasons for the shift suggest serious problems for China's export machine that go far beyond the concerns over rising costs for wages, shipping, and materials that got a lot of attention earlier this year. AMR asked U.S. manufacturers to rate different regions around the world (China and the U.S. were each counted as region unto themselves) on 15 different risks tied to sourcing products for sale in America. Just a few months ago the biggest concerns over China were rising factory wages and the hike in trans-Pacific shipping costs owing to soaring fuel prices. Since then, the 60% plunge in oil prices and a sharp falloff in U.S. imports from China have caused spot freight prices on ocean shipping to crash. Now, the biggest concerns over China are quality and theft of intellectual property (BusinessWeek.com, 4/27/06). Half of respondents to the survey cited China as the biggest source of "risk" for product quality failure. Fifty-seven percent rated China as the biggest risk of intellectual-property infringement. Both categories represented sharp increases from May. No other region was named as the biggest source of risk in those two areas by more than 7% of respondents. In fact, China ranked highest in 9 of the 15 risk factors. Rising labor costs are still an important factor for businesses, with 35% citing China as the leading source of concern. Other risk categories where China ranked highest included regulatory compliance, commodity price volatility, supply-chain security breaches, and information technology problems. The shortage of Chinese managerial talent—long one of the top risk factors during the go-go era that ended last year—has tailed off as a major worry.

Oil and Commodities

OPEC to Try to Halt Oil-Price Decline OPEC members will meet later this month in a bid to halt the tumble in crude prices, amid signs that a global economic slowdown is punishing near-term demand for oil. The news of the meeting, which analysts expect will result in another production cut, came as oil prices hit a 22-month low amid fresh evidence that the world's industrialized economies are in recession and consumers and industries are cutting back on fuel spending. The Paris-based International Energy Agency on Thursday slashed its forecasts for global oil demand, saying it will grow by just 0.1% this year. That is down from last month's projection of 0.5% growth and far below the 1.1% growth rate of 2007. Many analysts think global oil demand will actually contract this year, for the first time since 1983. The IEA, an energy watchdog that advises 28 industrialized countries, said Thursday that consumers and businesses globally are expected to use on average 86.2 million barrels a day this year -- a downward revision of 330,000 barrels from the agency's October report. The IEA also slashed its 2009 world crude demand forecast by 670,000 barrels a day and said consumption next year is expected to grow by a mere 0.4% to 86.5 million barrels a day. The changes in the IEA's forecasts underscore the extent to which a slowing global economy is hurting crude consumption.

Oil recovery? World oil prices could easily fall below $50 a barrel and might even slip toward $40 or perhaps $35, but they will recover and could do so fairly quickly, analysts and economists say. Benchmark U.S. crude futures dropped to a 22-month low under $55 on Thursday as evidence mounted that the deepening recession would have a severe impact on demand, reducing the use of oil by industries and individuals alike. Oil has now fallen more than 60 percent from July's record $147.27 a barrel and is moving close to what is widely considered to be the average operating cost, or "cash cost," for the world's oil major oil companies around $50 a barrel. Many analysts think the market is likely to fall further, breaching the psychological $50 barrier before recovering. "How low prices go is rather random: $50, $40, $35? It could be any of those numbers," said Kevin Norrish, analyst at Barclays Capital in London. "All we would say is that the lower it goes, the further out of equilibrium the market is headed." Driven short-term as much by sentiment in futures markets as rational calculations over fundamental costs for production, many analysts say the oil price is likely to go well beyond the level justified even by a dramatic fall in demand. IEA chief Nobuo Tanaka said on Wednesday the price of oil was already "overshooting" to the downside: "The market is over-reacting," he told Reuters. Analysts liken oil price moves to a weight on a piece of elastic: most of the time it swings within fairly narrow ranges, reacting to signals on supply and demand and other news but occasionally a big shock makes it swing to wild extremes. "Just as on the upside we went too far, so on the downside, we are going too far as well," said Dugdale. Most analysts see prices recovering fairly quickly in the next few months, according to a Reuters poll of 34 analysts last week, which produced an average forecast for WTI next year of $81.30 and almost $90 in 2010. Barclays Capital sees the price for U.S. crude recovering to average almost $78 a barrel in the fourth quarter of this year and bouncing back to more than $105 for 2009.

November 24, 2008

Storm Flags Flying: State of the Evolving Downturn

In some ways it almost seems moot to review the economic data - one of the things we constantly examine for its' own sake AND because it defines the context for business performance - given that all the things we habitually talk about are now showing up in the headlines. We should also note that this is, to a large extent, becoming a macro-topdown driven business environment. In other words this tsunamic surge is one of the two most important things that businesses need to be concerned with. The other major concern is the number of businesses caught flat-footed, ill-prepared and as a result are about to do some really stupid things reactively rather than because they've thought it thru. As Warren said - we're going to find out who's been swimming naked (a lot we guess); and we're then going to find out who's smart enough and fast enough to get back under the water or find a suit. The good news, such as it is, is that this downturn will be longer and deeper than anybody is preparing for yet BUT IT WON'T BE ANOTHER DEPRESSION. Sailors have something called the Beaufort Scale to help them report, analyze and prepare for storms. Right now we're headed into a Force 7 storm and will likely to be in a Force 10 ultimately. But not a Force 12+. Look it up - the descriptions are pretty apt IOHO.

Retail Sales

There's lots of economic data we could review but we're going to focus on a critical one - real retail sales (hattip WSJ btw - first they started using YoY data and then they started using real YoY data. Outstanding). You'll find after the break a rather extensive collection of readings on the that and other current economic data. In the first panel the monthly data back to Jan00 shows what we've been warning about for months, but only if you really focus on the inflation-adjusted data. The slowmotion slowdown is clear but crossing the tipping point to a downturn began shows up in late '07 in the real data but only in Q3 for the nominal. The second panel shows quarterly data YoY back to '92 and mostly reinforces that message with an additional caveat/observation,  really important one. We're now well below the worst prior downturns since '90 and headed lower.

Strategic Situation

To come back to the economic Beaufort Scale take a look at this graphic which shows five alternative pathways that we could take. The "purple" one was the fantasies of a short, shallow downturn being floated last winter and even spring by the business press and CNBC talking heads which is now deader than a doornail. The important thing to note though is that the economic data at the time told us it was nonsense but everybody ignored it. The other dead alternative is the catastrophic downturn - though admittedly there's still some chance of a tipover if something real goes kablooie. By and large we think that's been avoided though when Paulson panicked in Sep. he had damm good reason. What we're really debating is the yellow vs black lines with a region of uncertainty between them.

There are two key critical factors (which are extensively covered in the reading excerpts after the break).

1. Credit Markets - can we keep the wheels on the wagon and begin to unfreeze credit. While it's slowly creaking back into motion it's still not doing very well. On the other hand we'd have to say that compared to what happened and what could have we're actually doing wonderfully well.

2. Fiscal Policy - everybody forgets that this last downturn was shallow only because the Housing ATM let mortgage equity subsidize consumption. For the record we all benefited from the financial legerdemain besides just the direct beneficiaries. Otherwise we'd have had a much more severe, longer-lasting downturn in '01. Especially coming off the collapse of the Tech Bubble. That could have triggered a depression in itself. The ATM kicked in $300B/quarter or more for several years so a multi-year $600-800B stimulus package is not out of line to get the economy back on track.

In other words keep your eye on the new econ team and what gets thru Congress, hopefully asap. All our lives depend on it. 

Economic Status

Goldman Slashes U.S. Growth Forecasts, Says Recession Deepens Goldman Sachs Group Inc. increased its recession estimates, saying gross domestic product is declining at a 5 percent annual rate in the current quarter and will drop 3 percent and 1 percent in the next two quarters. Unemployment will reach 9 percent by the fourth quarter of 2009, Goldman economists led by Jan Hatzius wrote in a research note today.

U.S. Recession Probably Deepened in October as Consumer Spending Plunged The U.S. recession probably deepened as consumer spending plunged in October by the most since the 2001 downturn and businesses slashed investment, government reports may show this week. Purchases declined 1 percent after a 0.3 percent drop the prior month, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News ahead of Commerce Department figures due Nov. 26. Commerce may also report the same day that orders for long-lasting goods fell for the second time in three months. The credit crisis has forced cash-strapped consumers to pull back on purchases and companies to cut spending and step up firings. Housing and manufacturing also are deteriorating, a sign the economy is sinking further into what may be the most severe slump in decades.

Planned job cuts highest in 5 years October was another awful month for jobs. Two key employment reports released Wednesday showed the largest number of planned job cuts in nearly five years, and private sector jobs fell by the largest amount in nearly seven years. Job cut announcements by U.S. employers soared to 112,884 in October, up 19% from September's 95,094 cuts, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. It was the highest number of pink slips handed out since January 2004. Layoffs last month were up 79% from October 2007, when 63,114 job cuts were announced. Separately, payroll manager ADP said Wednesday that the private sector lost a seasonally adjusted 157,000 jobs last month, more than six times September's decrease and the largest decrease since December 2001. The dour reports were ominous signs for the jobs market ahead of the Department of Labor's monthly unemployment report on Friday. That report is expected to show that 200,000 jobs were lost in October and that the unemployment rate grew to 6.3% from 6.1% a month earlier. October's numbers bring the total number of planned job cuts to 875,974 in 2008, 14% higher than all of 2007 and the largest 10-month total since 2003. The embattled financial and automaking industries were hit the hardest, as they have been all year. The struggling industries have combined for 239,760 layoffs so far this year, representing 27% of all layoffs in 2008.

Factory Orders Dropped in September The slowing U.S. economy is reducing demand for manufactured goods and will likely prompt further cutbacks in the beleaguered manufacturing sector. Orders for manufactured goods fell 2.5% in September, or $11.2 billion, to $432 billion, the Commerce Department said Tuesday, following a 4.3% drop in August. The drop reflected slackening demand for goods as well as price-related declines in orders for oil and related fuels. Total orders excluding transportation, which economists use to strip out volatility and gauge underlying demand, sank 3.7% in September from the month before, the largest percentage drop in the series' 16-year history. A closely watched measure of business spending -- nondefense capital goods orders excluding aircraft -- fell 1.5% in September, a sign companies are reining in spending, which often precedes layoffs.

U.S. Auto Sales Plunged in October U.S. auto sales in October plunged 32% to their lowest monthly level since 1991. The dismal U.S. auto market took a turn for the worse in October, with sales plunging by about a third as the financial crisis and tightening credit kept buyers away from showrooms. Auto makers sold 838,186 cars and light trucks last month, according to a tally by Autodata Corp. General Motors Corp. said it was the worst October in 25 years. When adjusted for increases in the U.S. population, last month was "the worst month in the post-World War II era," Michael DiGiovanni, GM's top sales analyst, said in a conference call. "This is clearly a severe, severe recession." Auto executives warned that the market could deteriorate further, raising the question as to when the auto industry -- a key driver of the U.S. economy -- will hit bottom. The modest decline in U.S. economic output in the third quarter "is not likely to be the worst we will see in this cycle," Ford Motor Co. economist Emily Kolinski Morris said in a company conference call.A closely watched industry figure, the seasonally adjusted annualized selling rate, was 10.6 million vehicles, compared with 16 million a year earlier, according to Autodata. Ford sales analyst George Pipas said the current sales trend could pull total 2008 sales below 14 million cars and trucks. At the beginning of the year many car companies had expected sales of roughly 15 million vehicles, already below the 16 million annual figure considered to be healthy.

Retail Sales Show Broad Weakness Weak October sales by the nation's retailers presage an austere holiday shopping season and a downturn that could last well into 2009, adding to calls for policy makers to stimulate the economy. The Commerce Department reported Friday that its broad measure of U.S. retail sales dropped by 2.8% in October -- the largest monthly drop since records began in 1992. Sales have fallen for four straight months, a longer streak than during the 2001 recession, with declines worsening each month. As consumers pull back, the threat rises of a deep and prolonged recession. "This sets up a very bad holiday season, with the risk that many stores that flourished over the last several years are going to go bankrupt," said Christian Menegatti, a lead U.S. analyst with RGEMonitor.com, a research and consulting firm. "You can't spend what you don't have. It's just not possible to continue spending if the income growth isn't there." Retail Sales Graphic
Why Some Retailers Are Faring Better

A Sea of Unwanted Imports Gleaming new Mercedes cars roll one by one out of a huge container ship here and onto a pier. Ordinarily the cars would be loaded on trucks within hours, destined for dealerships around the country. But these are not ordinary times. For now, the port itself is the destination. Unwelcome by dealers and buyers, thousands of cars worth tens of millions of dollars are being warehoused on increasingly crowded port property. And for the first time, Mercedes-Benz, Toyota, and Nissan have each asked to lease space from the port for these orphan vehicles. They are turning dozens of acres of the nation’s second-largest container port into a parking lot, creating a vivid picture of a paralyzed auto business and an economy in peril. “This is one way to look at the economy,” Art Wong, a spokesman for the port, said of the cars. “And it scares you to death.” The backlog at the port is just part of a broader rise in the nation’s inventories, which were up 5.5 percent in September from a year earlier, according to the Commerce Department. The car industry has been hurt particularly, with sales down nearly 15 percent this year. General Motors has said it would run out of operating cash by the end of the year if it does not receive a government bailout. But the inventory glut in Long Beach is not limited to imported cars. There has also been a sharp drop in demand for the port’s single largest export: recycled cardboard and paper products. This material typically goes to China, where it is used to make boxes for new electronics and other products that are sent back to the United States. But Chinese factories reacting to sharply falling demand are slowing production, so they need less cardboard. Tons of paper are piling up recycling businesses around the port, the detritus of economies on hold. Long Beach is an important port, particularly for the West. It is where imported products arrive and filter through the tributary of trucks, trains and retailers into the hands of consumers. But now, products are just sitting.

Credit Problems vs Economy

Bank Clampdown Dogs Economy Banks continue to tighten lending terms for the nation's consumers and businesses, hamstringing the economy and raising the risk of a protracted recession. The Federal Reserve's latest survey of banks' senior loan officers showed that a large majority of the 76 U.S. and foreign-based respondents clamped down on lending in the past three months amid mounting losses and concern about the nation's economy. Also, separate reports Monday showed manufacturing activity slowed, and construction spending fell, though not as steeply as expected. "It means the downturn is likely to be deep and will last longer than anything we've seen in a long time," said Michael Darda, chief economist at Stamford, Conn.-based MKM Partners. "There's still a lot of pain in front of us." Some 95% of banks in the U.S. said they tightened price terms on commercial and industrial loans to large and midsize firms in the past three months, according to the Fed survey. A total of 85% tightened lending standards, compared with 60% in the previous three-month period, which ended in July. Roughly 60% of U.S. banks tightened lending standards on credit-card loans and other types of consumer loans, while about half said they raised the minimum required credit scores for such loans. The survey, which was conducted in October, found that the moves were driven by more pessimistic views on the U.S. economy as well as rising loan defaults in recent months. "This pushes any kind of trough in the economy until late next year," Mr. Darda said, noting that tight credit, falling equity and real-estate wealth and rising unemployment make it unlikely that consumer spending, the largest driver of U.S. economic growth, will rebound soon. Recession Bellweather Graphics

Credit Crisis Indicators Yesterday saw a stunning flight to treasuries across the board. The 3-month yield fell to zero. The 2 year yield was at a record low. Even the 30 year yield decreased sharply. The 3-month at zero can be explained as a flight to quality and another crisis in the credit markets, but the declines in the longer yields probably suggest deflation trades. Here are a few indicators of credit stress once again suggesting little progress over the last few days.

U.S. Bailout Plans Come Under Pressure The U.S. government's financial-system rescue plans are coming under pressure as a growing array of distressed companies signal the need for assistance. On Monday, mortgage giant Fannie Mae said it is losing money so rapidly it may need a cash infusion from the Treasury Department by year's end. The funds would come from a special $100 billion pool Treasury set aside back in September to aid the company. Fannie Mae had a loss of $29 billion for the third quarter. In another sign of the stress on financial-services companies, American Express Co. won swift approval from the Federal Reserve to become a bank-holding company. The move paves the way for the credit-card giant to get a taxpayer-funded capital infusion from the Treasury. The chorus of calls for help could pressure the Bush administration to widen the scope of its $700 billion bailout plan, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which was authorized in October.Treasury officials have refused so far to open TARP to U.S. car makers, despite lobbying from Congress to do so. The Treasury has committed all but $60 billion of the first $350 billion in funds granted by Congress under the TARP plan. That sum remains after accounting for Treasury's planned investments in the banking sector and Monday's additional $40 billion investment in troubled insurer American International Group Inc. AIG was originally bailed out by the Federal Reserve in September, and Fannie Mae, along with its sister company Freddie Mac, was seized by the government the same month. The rescue efforts are "evolving in ways that I don't think anyone anticipated," said Camden Fine, president and CEO of the Independent Community Bankers of America, a trade group. "Things are just hitting them from every single direction, every day, and I don't think they know whether to spit or go blind."
AmEx Gets Access to Bailout Fund

What is the Fed to do? This picture from Paul Krugman is deeply troubling. It shows the real interest rates on corporate bonds, with the expected rate of inflation from the spread between 20-year TIPS and 20-year Treasury rates. The Fed is supposed to cut real interest rates as the economy weakens, but the opposite seems to be happening. The problem is that the Fed is close to its zero lower bound on the federal funds rate, perceptions of credit risk are rising, and expected inflation is falling. Indeed, as I pointed out yesterday, people are increasingly concerned about possible deflation. What is the Fed to do (other than pray)? Expectations management is the key.
Here is one idea. Suppose the Fed cuts the federal funds rate once again to, say, 25 basis points. More important, at the same time, the Fed announces a target path for the price level as measured by the core CPI. The price path might be, say, an increase of 2 or 3 percent per year. The Fed promises not to raise the fed funds rate over the next 12 months and, after that, will keep the funds rate at that low level as long as the price level is significantly below its target path. The credibility of the promise is paramount. To get long-term real interest rates down, the Fed needs to convince markets that it will vigorously combat deflation, and that if deflation happens in the short run, the Fed will reverse it by subsequently producing extra inflation. A credible promise of subsequent price reversal after any deflation ensures that long-term expected inflation stays close to the inflation rate implied by the Fed's target price path. Monetary economists will recognize that this policy is price-level targeting rather than inflation targeting.
A Macroeconomic Puzzle, Treasuries as Negative Beta Assets?

Strategic Situation and Policy 

Economists Search for End of Woes Economists struggling to gauge the depth of the U.S. downturn are turning to more forward-looking clues, such as home-vacancy rates and foreign stock markets. The standard measures of gross domestic product and monthly payroll figures give snapshots of what has happened, but say less about what will happen next. The current downturn is shaping up to be worse than the recessions of 1990-91 and 2001 and the prolonged downturn that ended in 1982. Banks are cutting back on lending, consumers are spending less, companies are shedding jobs amid sinking profits, and the housing bust that triggered the slide persists. Here are five areas economists are watching, and the indicators they are tracking. New Indicator GraphicGet Ready For 'Stag-Deflation' Back in January, I argued that four major forces would lead to a risk of deflation-- or "stag-deflation," where a recession would be associated with deflationary forces--rather than the inflation that mainstream analysts have worried about. They were: (1) a slack in goods markets, (2) a re-coupling of the rest of the world with the U.S. recession, (3) a slack in labor markets, and (4) a sharp fall in commodity prices following such U.S. and global contraction, which would reduce inflationary forces and lead to deflationary forces in the global economy. How has such argument fared over time? And will the U.S. and global economies soon face sharp deflationary pressures? The answer: Deflation and stag-deflation will, in six months, become the main concern of policy authorities. Why? First, the U.S. has entered a severe recession that is already leading to deflationary forces in sectors where supply vastly exceeds demand (housing, consumer durables, motor vehicles, etc.). Aggregate demand is falling sharply below aggregate supply. The unemployment rate is up sharply, while employment has been falling for 10 months in a row. And commodity prices are sharply down--about 30% from their July peak--in the last three months, and are likely to fall much more in the next few months as the advanced economies' recession goes global. So both in the U.S. and in other advanced economies we are clearly headed toward a collapse of headline and core inflation. Is there any doubt about this ongoing inflation capitulation and the beginning of sharp deflationary forces?

When Consumers Capitulate The long-feared capitulation of American consumers has arrived. According to Thursday’s G.D.P. report, real consumer spending fell at an annual rate of 3.1 percent in the third quarter; real spending on durable goods (stuff like cars and TVs) fell at an annual rate of 14 percent. To appreciate the significance of these numbers, you need to know that American consumers almost never cut spending. Consumer demand kept rising right through the 2001 recession; the last time it fell even for a single quarter was in 1991, and there hasn’t been a decline this steep since 1980, when the economy was suffering from a severe recession combined with double-digit inflation. Also, these numbers are from the third quarter — the months of July, August, and September. So these data are basically telling us what happened before confidence collapsed after the fall of Lehman Brothers in mid-September, not to mention before the Dow plunged below 10,000. Nor do the data show the full effects of the sharp cutback in the availability of consumer credit, which is still under way. So this looks like the beginning of a very big change in consumer behavior. And it couldn’t have come at a worse time. For the fact is that we are in a liquidity trap right now: Fed policy has lost most of its traction. It’s true that Ben Bernanke hasn’t yet reduced interest rates all the way to zero, as the Japanese did in the 1990s. But it’s hard to believe that cutting the federal funds rate from 1 percent to nothing would have much positive effect on the economy. In particular, the financial crisis has made Fed policy largely irrelevant for much of the private sector: The Fed has been steadily cutting away, yet mortgage rates and the interest rates many businesses pay are higher than they were early this year. The capitulation of the American consumer, then, is coming at a particularly bad time. But it’s no use whining. What we need is a policy response. The ongoing efforts to bail out the financial system, even if they work, won’t do more than slightly mitigate the problem. Maybe some consumers will be able to keep their credit cards, but as we’ve seen, Americans were overextended even before banks started cutting them off. No, what the economy needs now is something to take the place of retrenching consumers. That means a major fiscal stimulus. And this time the stimulus should take the form of actual government spending rather than rebate checks that consumers probably wouldn’t spend.

A long, shaky bridge to recovery The lessons of Japan’s stumbling path out of deflation and recession suggest that government spending can help stave off an extended recession, but it may take years not months and require an unlikely combination of political will and consensus. That’ll be a lot of bridges to nowhere. The particular type of recession the United States faces, a balance sheet one, means that cutting interest rates will be really pretty ineffective, and while you can throw everything you have at saving the banking system, you can’t make people and businesses borrow and put the money to work. They too have their own balance sheet problems, having loaded up on debt and holding as they are assets like real estate and stocks that have fallen in value. Banks too are about to get whacked by another hit to their assets, as corporations respond to newly lousy economic conditions by, well, defaulting. In short, it’s a negative self-reinforcing cycle that low interest rates do little to break and that is bigger, though related, to the problems in the financial system. Government spending can break the cycle. Not tax cuts, which will only go to pay down debt or are saved into a banking system that isn’t working, but actual bricks and mortar. Think the New Deal’s Works Progress Administration super-sized or Japan building highways and bridges over seemingly every river, stream and rivulet. Lessons from Japan’s Great Recession. “I don’t think it will be over quickly. I am recommending at least three to five years seamless medium-term fiscal stimulus measures to give enough time for the private sector to repair its balance sheet.” Three to five years is an eternity in political life. It is an absolute sure thing that incoming President Barack Obama will design and implement a pretty chunky fiscal stimulus package even if President Bush does not pass one in his waning days in office. But think about how difficult it will be to maintain both the will and power to maintain a huge borrow and spend program for several years. Koo thinks that Japan, which was facing a far more serious destruction of assets, derailed its recovery with premature fiscal reform. “If we had known in advance that this kind of recession will never be over until private balance sheets are repaired and fiscal stimulus is needed to keep the economy growing, we could have done it in seven or eight years perhaps instead of 15,” he said.

Obama-Pelosi Billions May Fail to Revive Growth as Slump Defeats Stimulus President-elect Barack Obama and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi may throw as much as half a trillion dollars worth of stimulus at the economy -- and have little or no growth to show for it. The forces arrayed against recovery, including the credit contraction and cutbacks by consumers, are so powerful that they may overwhelm the record sums of spending and tax cuts being discussed in Washington. The only consolation, economists say, is that without the stimulus, things would be even worse. ``It's hard for me to imagine we'll have a return to positive growth before the fourth quarter of 2009, even with a $500 billion stimulus,'' says Barry Eichengreen, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley. He sees the unemployment rate rising to 9.5 percent in early 2010, from 6.5 percent now. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania, says the economy may contract 2 percent next year without a package of at least $300 billion. With it, ``we could get growth pretty close to zero,'' he adds. That would still be the worst result since 1991. ``The breadth and potential depth'' of the crisis call for a ``bolder'' approach, Obama economic adviser Gene Sperling said in congressional testimony Nov. 13. A package costing $300 billion to $400 billion ``should be the starting point, with an understanding that more could be needed,'' Sperling said, noting he was speaking for himself. That's one reason why Martin Feldstein, the Harvard University economics professor, now favors a major government program that will directly inject money into the economy instead of depending on consumers. ``I hate to say it, because I'm a guy who doesn't like government spending and doesn't like fiscal deficits, but I don't see any alternative,'' he said in a Bloomberg Television interview Nov. 12.

Obama Aims to Create 2.5 Million U.S. Jobs Amid `Historic' Economic Crisis President-elect Barack Obama said he aims to save or create 2.5 million jobs in a two-year plan to stimulate an economy facing a “crisis of historic proportions.” “It’s likely to get worse before it gets better,” Obama said today in his weekly radio address. He said that this week “financial markets faced more turmoil,” potentially leading to a “deflationary spiral” that may plunge the nation further into debt and cost millions more jobs. The economic slowdown has been exacerbated by the worst credit crisis in seven decades. More firings will weigh on the economy and consumer spending, putting pressure on Obama and Congress to agree on legislation that will stimulate growth. The incoming 44th president is expected to announce, as early as Monday, his economic team, to be headed by Timothy Geithner, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, as Treasury secretary. Others include Jacob Lew, former President Bill Clinton‘s White House budget director, who will serve as National Economic Council director; and Peter Orszag, head of the Congressional Budget Office, who will be the next White House budget director. Obama hailed this week’s enactment of a $6 billion extension of unemployment benefits, and said more needs to be done, and quickly. “We have now lost 1.2 million jobs this year, and if we don’t act swiftly and boldly, most experts now believe that we could lose millions of jobs next year,” Obama said. The president-elect’s address was also recorded on video and was posted on the official presidential transition website - - http://www.change.gov/
!!! Obama: "Act Swiftly and Boldly"

What if a Slowdown Is a Never-Ending Story? The problem now, as in 1929 to 1940, is that the economy is not functioning normally. It is shot through and through with fear, even terror. Worse yet, and unlike the situation in the Depression, government miscues have been only a part of the problem. This fear is so pervasive that it has brought the credit sector to a virtual shutdown, even to borrowers with good credit. At this point, the lending sector is so panicked —largely from the government’s inconsistent behavior and failure to rescue Lehman Brothers — that it is frozen. Not totally, but way too much for ease of lending and maybe even for the survival of a robust economy. And if a colossal worldwide deleveraging spreads to Treasury debt owned by foreigners, the situation will be deadly serious. The unemployment rate is rising. Housing is in collapse. Manufacturing is weak. The unionized auto sector is dying before our eyes. Commodities are falling hard and fast. In this situation, the nation faces a real peril: we could reach a state of long-term equilibrium — as economists say — well below full employment. This condition had been thought by classical economists to be impossible to reach. But the Depression taught us that if there is enough fear in the economy, lenders will not lend and economic activity will continue indefinitely at a level consistent with serious recession or even depression. This was John Maynard Keynes’s great contribution to economic understanding, and it’s a big one. Of course, it is contested, as all macroeconomics is, and it may not be the full explanation, but we know from observation that an industrial economy can run well below capacity for a long time. We should be terrified by this prospect. It would mean real suffering for tens of millions of people in America — maybe billions worldwide. In this situation, where fear rules, we must turn to the federal government for relief. The private sector is the patient, not the doctor. Solvency guarantees for banks that lend are a must. No more Lehmans can be allowed to happen. A truly serious stimulus package is very much in order. It has to be big enough and last long enough that Americans do not just sock it away under the mattress. We cannot nickel-and-dime our way out of this. The inflation threat is small in an economy in full credit-collapse mode. There is virtually no dose of stimulus that is too much in an economy as shellshocked as today’s.

November 03, 2008

It's Back: Welcome to the Downturn for Real

Well time to pick up the discussion on the state of the economy; and if you've been playing along with us here last Friday's GDP numbers are no particular surprise. You may recall our mentioning (graphically) the slowmotion slowdown devolving into a tipping point turnover ?? We won't review those posts but will dive right into these and try and sketch things out for you. But first a little light relief - instead of Apocalypse Now we bring you Collapse Now with Col. Ben taking the role of Col. Duval. The dual problem with that sort of black humor is we've been warning about the situation for so long our innate reaction is "so what" but judging from the casual strangers we find weeping in airports 98% of the population is beyond surprised.

Which leads us right to the charts and numbers. First off the bad news - in our judgment this recession which we're really starting to enter will be longer and deeper than anticipated by almost everybody. Worse, some joking aside, most folks - especially business decision-makers - are getting caught more flat-footed than they should be. Think of it as Darwinian filtration in action except it'll take a lot of innocents with the idioten.

Q3 GDP Results

 Starting with the basics this charts shows YoY changes in GDP, Consumption (PCE) and Employment back to 1980 and there's a lot of nuanced information buried in it. Have a drink and let's talk. Normally we don't run back this far as it's hard to see that Consumption went in the tank at this scale. But that immediately sets up our next point about the length and duration of the on-coming recession. Notice that the slowmotion slowdown tipped over in Q407 for Consumption but GDP had been holding up and has now followed over the cliff. Further notice that, as long advertised, Employment took a long time to build, peaked quick and low compared to prior recoveries and has been deteriorating for quite a while. And we're still early days yet - in our judgment this will be drawn out and deeper than anticipated.

Business Decelerations

If you look at harbingers of future growth, i.e. business spending it's just beginning to tip over; which is what you'd normally expect give the lags between different parts of the business cycle. The 800lb. canary here is Industrial Production which has tipped over rather quickly and abruptly - based on the most recent data. Now aggregate investment has been dropping for a while because of problems with Real Estate and Housing; what this tells us is that capital spending (& hiring) are about to slow; perhaps sharply in the months ahead.

Future Demand

You may recall our mentioning occasionally that the best indicator of future demand was the sum of the changes in real wages and employment. On this chart you can see how closely PCE is correlated with W+E and how consumption drives the economy. Now take a look at how the W+E curve is doing - looks like an Acapulco cliff diver to me. Now put the pieces together - if future consumer demand is about to take one in the neck AND employment has yet to really turn over what does that tell us about the future path of the economy ?

The answer is left as a take-home exercise of the student (HINT: can you spell longer and deeper ?). As usual if you care to continue reading you'll find an eclectic set of excerpts on the state of the economy that highlight some of these points. And perhaps might serve to crib your answers from if we haven't been clear enough.

The good news, btw and it is indeed good, is that while this will be worse than anything we've seen since 1980 we don't expect it to significantly worse than that or 1975. In other words we've been here before. And this most certainly is not the beginnings of another Great Depression. Someday we'll post those charts for compare and contrast but trust us - when aggregate GDP drops by over 25% in three years and when it takes almost a decade for aggregate growth to get back to breakeven a few measley % points of downturn are nothing. 

Economy

Off the Charts - More Evidence That the Recession Has Already Arrived The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago maintains an index, called the National Activity Index, which in the past has nearly always signaled the beginning of a recession when it fell to a certain level, shown as negative 0.7 in the accompanying chart. It hit that level last December, and has stayed there since. This week, the Fed released the reading for September, which was the worst for a single month since 1982 and a sign that the recession is deepening. The actual reading for September was a negative 2.6, although the three-month average was negative 1.8. The lowest three-month reading in 2001 was negative 1.4, indicating that this downturn is worse than that one. “It’s the first aggregate index to clearly break through the mild recession of 2001, and it looks like the reading will break through the recession before that when the October data comes in,” said Robert Barbera, the chief economist of ITG. And yet it was not until last month that many economists began to think a recession was likely, and many believe it began in the third quarter of this year, rather than many months earlier. The index measures the change in the economy each month as shown by 85 indicators of economic activity. A value of zero indicates the economy is growing in line with long-term trends, while values above that indicate above-trend growth. The Fed says that a level of negative 0.7 indicates a recession may well have begun. For those who care what the numbers actually signify, a number of plus or minus one indicates the month’s results were one standard deviation above normal economic growth. The Fed said the biggest cause of the sharp falloff in September was a decline in income and production, particularly industrial production. The Fed has index figures going back to 1967, and in one way the current downturn is the longest ever. The three-month average has been negative — meaning that the economy is not growing as fast as normal — for 29 consecutive months beginning in May 2006. The longest previous streak was 25 months, ending in February 1983.
 Chicago Fed National Activity Index

Spending Stalls and Businesses Slash U.S. Jobs As the financial crisis crimps demand for American goods and services, the workers who produce them are losing their jobs by the tens of thousands. Layoffs have arrived in force, like a wrenching second act in the unfolding crisis. In just the last two weeks, the list of companies announcing their intention to cut workers has read like a Who’s Who of corporate America: Merck, Yahoo, General Electric, Xerox, Pratt & Whitney, Goldman Sachs, Whirlpool, Bank of America, Alcoa, Coca-Cola, the Detroit automakers and nearly all the airlines. When October’s job losses are announced on Nov. 7, three days after the presidential election, many economists expect  the number to exceed 200,000. The current unemployment rate of 6.1 percent is likely to rise, perhaps significantly. “My view is that it will be near 8 or 8.5 percent by the end of next year,” said Nigel Gault, chief domestic economist at Global Insight, offering a forecast others share. That would be the highest unemployment rate since the deep recession of the early 1980s. The broadening layoffs are most pronounced on Wall Street, in the auto industry, in construction, in the airlines and in retailing. The steel mills, big suppliers to many sectors of the economy, are shutting 17 of the nation’s 29 blast furnaces — a startling indicator of how quickly output is declining as corporate America struggles to adjust to the spreading crisis. In September alone, 2,269 employers each laid off 50 people or more, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported, up sharply from the spring and summer months, and the highest number since September 2001, when the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks coincided with a recession to spook employers. A spike in 2005 was related to Hurricane Katrina. The financial services industry has been cutting jobs since last summer, when the credit crisis took hold. By some estimates, 300,000 jobs will disappear from banks, mutual fund groups, hedge funds and other financial services companies before the crisis subsides — 35,000 of them in New York. Goldman Sachs alone, among the best performers on Wall Street, has announced plans to cut 10 percent of its work force, which stood at 32,594 at the end of last month. The current unemployment rate, 6.1 percent — up more than a percentage point since April — is still relatively mild by post-World War II standards. The highest level since the Great Depression, 10.8 percent, came in November and December of 1982 as the economy was shaking off a severe recession. The unemployment rate hit 9 percent during the mid-1970s recession, and 7.8 percent in the 1990-1991 downturn. The next peak, 6.3 percent, occurred in June 2003, during a long jobless recovery in the aftermath of the 2001 recession.

Job Losses Buffet U.S. Early, Compounding the Downturn A rash of new job data show the labor market is now the worst it's been since the two prior recessions in 2001 and the early 1990s. One of the starkest indicators is that the number of people who have been unemployed for 27 weeks or more reached two million in September. That's 21% of the total unemployed, and approaching the prior peaks of about 23% in 2003 and 1992. The prospects of these job seekers grow dimmer as layoffs spread beyond the financial, home-building and auto industries. Also in September, companies saw 2,269 mass layoffs -- in which at least 50 people are let go at once -- more than at any time since September 2001. And while the unemployment rate is at a five-year high at 6.1%, a broader measure of weakness that includes people who have stopped looking for work or whose hours have been cut to part-time is 11% -- the highest in 15 years. What worries many economists is that labor markets usually reach their weakest point after a recession has ended. During the so-called "jobless recovery" following the 2001 recession, jobs continued to be shed after it was officially declared over. But the current weakness comes as the country heads into a recession that is now forecast to be deeper and longer than previously thought. "No one thinks we are anywhere near the bottom of this, and we're already rivaling these other recessions," says Heidi Shierholz, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank in Washington. As chances of getting a new job right away grow more faint, so too does the ability to pay mortgages and credit-card bills. That could lead to more foreclosures, chill consumer spending and delay recovery.

Economists Search for End of Woes Economists struggling to gauge the depth of the U.S. downturn are turning to more forward-looking clues, such as home-vacancy rates and foreign stock markets. The standard measures of gross domestic product and monthly payroll figures give snapshots of what has happened, but say less about what will happen next. The current downturn is shaping up to be worse than the recessions of 1990-91 and 2001 and the prolonged downturn that ended in 1982. Banks are cutting back on lending, consumers are spending less, companies are shedding jobs amid sinking profits, and the housing bust that triggered the slide persists. Here are five areas economists are watching, and the indicators they are tracking. New Indicator Graphic

Get Ready For 'Stag-Deflation' Back in January, I argued that four major forces would lead to a risk of deflation-- or "stag-deflation," where a recession would be associated with deflationary forces--rather than the inflation that mainstream analysts have worried about. They were: (1) a slack in goods markets, (2) a re-coupling of the rest of the world with the U.S. recession, (3) a slack in labor markets, and (4) a sharp fall in commodity prices following such U.S. and global contraction, which would reduce inflationary forces and lead to deflationary forces in the global economy. How has such argument fared over time? And will the U.S. and global economies soon face sharp deflationary pressures? The answer: Deflation and stag-deflation will, in six months, become the main concern of policy authorities. Why? First, the U.S. has entered a severe recession that is already leading to deflationary forces in sectors where supply vastly exceeds demand (housing, consumer durables, motor vehicles, etc.). Aggregate demand is falling sharply below aggregate supply. The unemployment rate is up sharply, while employment has been falling for 10 months in a row. And commodity prices are sharply down--about 30% from their July peak--in the last three months, and are likely to fall much more in the next few months as the advanced economies' recession goes global. So both in the U.S. and in other advanced economies we are clearly headed toward a collapse of headline and core inflation. Is there any doubt about this ongoing inflation capitulation and the beginning of sharp deflationary forces?

When Consumers Capitulate The long-feared capitulation of American consumers has arrived. According to Thursday’s G.D.P. report, real consumer spending fell at an annual rate of 3.1 percent in the third quarter; real spending on durable goods (stuff like cars and TVs) fell at an annual rate of 14 percent. To appreciate the significance of these numbers, you need to know that American consumers almost never cut spending. Consumer demand kept rising right through the 2001 recession; the last time it fell even for a single quarter was in 1991, and there hasn’t been a decline this steep since 1980, when the economy was suffering from a severe recession combined with double-digit inflation. Also, these numbers are from the third quarter — the months of July, August, and September. So these data are basically telling us what happened before confidence collapsed after the fall of Lehman Brothers in mid-September, not to mention before the Dow plunged below 10,000. Nor do the data show the full effects of the sharp cutback in the availability of consumer credit, which is still under way. So this looks like the beginning of a very big change in consumer behavior. And it couldn’t have come at a worse time. For the fact is that we are in a liquidity trap right now: Fed policy has lost most of its traction. It’s true that Ben Bernanke hasn’t yet reduced interest rates all the way to zero, as the Japanese did in the 1990s. But it’s hard to believe that cutting the federal funds rate from 1 percent to nothing would have much positive effect on the economy. In particular, the financial crisis has made Fed policy largely irrelevant for much of the private sector: The Fed has been steadily cutting away, yet mortgage rates and the interest rates many businesses pay are higher than they were early this year. The capitulation of the American consumer, then, is coming at a particularly bad time. But it’s no use whining. What we need is a policy response. The ongoing efforts to bail out the financial system, even if they work, won’t do more than slightly mitigate the problem. Maybe some consumers will be able to keep their credit cards, but as we’ve seen, Americans were overextended even before banks started cutting them off. No, what the economy needs now is something to take the place of retrenching consumers. That means a major fiscal stimulus. And this time the stimulus should take the form of actual government spending rather than rebate checks that consumers probably wouldn’t spend.